B-21 “Raider”

The new B-21 bomber will be named the “Raider,” in honor of the Doolittle Raiders of World War II. Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James, speaking at ASC16, called 101-year-old last surviving Doolittle Raider Lt. Col. Dick Cole to the...

Surfing the Bow Wave

The Air Force’s modernization programs are well laid-out for the first of the next three five-year plans, but problems begin to arise in the “second and third” of those, Lt. Gen. Mike Holmes, USAF director of strategic planning. Holmes, who...

More Than 100 B-21s

Although Air Force requirements since 2010 have called for “80-100” B-21s, the actual number will most likely be more than that, Air Force Global Strike Command chief Gen. Robin Rand said at ASC16. During a panel discussion about the B-21—newly...

Raider Up and Running

The B-21 program has been “up and running” since February, when Boeing’s protest of the award to Northrop Grumman was resolved, Randall Warren, head of USAF’s Rapid Capabilities Office, said in a panel discussion about the bomber at ASC16. Warren,...

Four-Star Access

Gen. Robin Rand said Monday his status as a four-star general allows him more access to Air Force leadership and combatant commanders than prior Air Force Global Strike commanders might have had. “I do think that has happened in the...

Power Projection Practice

The B-1’s deployment to Guam will allow the Lancer crews to practice more missions in the “power projection arena,” Air Force Global Strike Command boss Gen. Robin Rand said Monday at ASC16. It’s important for bombers in the conventional role...

Lockheed Says T-50A is Lowest Risk

Lockheed Martin’s T-50A entrant in the T-X competition is “nothing new” and meets all the Air Force’s needs with little development, program chief test pilot “Red” Ward told reporters at ASC16. The T-50A, which is “a Lockheed airplane through and...

Increasing Fighter Pilot Production

To correct the existing and deepening fighter pilot shortage, Air Education and Training Command is taking two F-16 squadrons freed up by the arrival of F-35s at Hill AFB, Utah, to train more pilots, Brig. Gen. Andrew Croft, AETC director...

The Air Operations Center of the Future

The air operations center of the future must evolve to include multi-domain operations, including space and cyberspace, to be able to provide “on demand” targeting instead of the archaic air tasking order system the Air Force has been used to....

Finding the Sweet Spot

The integration of space and cyber has completely changed the nature of warfare, but the Air Force needs to do a better job at multi-domain command and control, said Lt. Gen. Jay Raymond, deputy chief of staff for operations on...

Pacer Classic III

Because the Air Force will not receive its full complement of 350 T-X trainers until 2034, another tranche of T-38 aircraft will be modified and re-winged under a program dubbed Pacer Classic III, Air Education and Training Command plans and...

The UAS Defense

The technology exists to protect Air Force Global Strike Command’s infrastructure from unmanned aircraft systems, but legislation and coordination with numerous agencies will be needed to deploy those capabilities, Gen. Robin Rand said Monday during ASC16. “Do we need to...

December Greens for F-35

The first F-35 basic course students to come straight out of undergraduate pilot training will start coursework in December, Air Education and Training Command chief Gen. Darryl Roberson told reporters at ASC16. He also said the first instructors from foreign...

Consolidated Battlefield Airmen Training

The Air Force is looking to consolidate its training of battlefield airmen from eight bases now to “something less,” likely three or four locations, Air Education and Training Command chief Gen. Darryl Roberson told reporters at ASC16. Roberson said that...

Protect Space, not Office Space

The ability of USAF to collaborate with allies, industry, academia, and other services around a unified space mission is gaining momentum, according to a panel on interoperability in space at ASC16. Thanks in part to “strong global partnerships and alliances,”...

A Need to Increase the Quantity of Quality

While NATO countries have an edge on the quality of air assets, especially the fifth generation F-35, there is a concern about the overall number of high quality aircraft the countries are acquiring, the head of one European air force...

Finding the Time

Air Force leadership wants to cut the amount of time airmen spend on ancillary training along with the time they spend on additional duties, Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein said Monday at ASC16. Goldfein said he believes the a?mount...

Air Force Needs “Chunk Education”

In order to address challenges from cybersecurity to the pilot shortage, the Air Force is employing an educational strategy known as “chunk education,” said Gen. Steven L. Kwast, Commander and President of Air University. This model of “just in time...

Unfinished Business

Retired Gen. Philip Breedlove, former Supreme Allied Commander Europe, said there were four issues that still concerned him when he retired in July. Speaking at ASC16, Breedlove said there are some members of NATO that are protected by Article V,...

Desert Storm’s Lessons for Today and the Future

The coalition victory over Iraqi forces in 1991’s Operation Desert Storm was a watershed moment for joint military operations in the modern era, and though today’s conflicts may appear different in scope and scale, there are many lessons to apply,...

Working Across Generations, Within NATO

NATO air forces are continuing to focus on how they can integrate fourth and fifth generation aircraft, from multiple countries, to ensure they can fight together as an alliance or coalition. NATO countries have been forced to “scrutinize each and...

Vertical Lift Technology Limited by Fiscal Constraints

Industry leaders in vertical lift technology agreed that budgetary limits and lack of efficiency in the acquisitions process is keeping USAF from deploying advanced technology. At ASC16, Keith Flail, vice president for military business development at Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc.,...

Smart People and Smart Machines

A hacking competition held by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in August showed that automated cyber defenses are needed to protect Pentagon networks, the agency’s deputy director said Monday at ASC16. “What was clear after that competition is that...